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Showing posts from March, 2024

Gounod's "Roméo et Juliette" at the Metropolitan Opera: "Live in HD" Telecast (Metropolitan Opera, aired March 23, 2024)

by Mark Gabrish Conlan • Copyright © 2024 by Mark Gabrish Conlan • All rights reserved Right now I’m listening to a 1976 radio broadcast of Charles Gounod’s opera Roméo et Juliette , featuring a capable cast – Alain Vanzo as Roméo and Andrée Esposito as Juliette – with Antonio de Almeida conducting the orchestra and chorus of the Opéra de Nice. This was the opera my husband Charles and I went to see yesterday afternoon in the Met’s “Live in HD” satellite telecast at the AMC 20 theatre complex in Mission Valley. The theatre management let us in free because there had been some dropouts when they tested the image, courtesy of interference from some storms that had been racking New York City recently, but in the end there was only a brief bit of digital dithering in the image towards the end. In these pages before I’ve noted my frustration that the truly great composers who contemplated writing operas based on Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet never did so while the lesser talents actuall

Haydn's "Seven Last Words of Christ on the Cross" Comes to Verbatim Books in Stunning Performance with Spoken-Word Pieces Included

by Mark Gabrish Conlan • Copyright © 2024 by Mark Gabrish Conlan • All rights reserved Last night (Wednesday, March 27) my husband Charles and I planned to attend an intriguing concert event at the Verbatim Books store on 30th Street and North Park Way. It was a co-production of the Hausmann String Quartet, a quite good local group consisting of violinists Isaac Allen and Bram Goldstein, violist Angela Choong and cellist Alex Greenbaum, and a local spoken-word ensemble called So Say We All. The program consisted of the string-quartet version of Franz Josef Haydn’s The Seven Last Words of Christ on the Cross , originally composed in 1786 for chamber orchestra at the behest of Don José Saenz de Santa Maria of Cádiz, Spain to perform at the dedication of a new church, the Oratorio de la Santa Cueva. Haydn later arranged the work for string quartet (1787), solo piano (1787) and vocal soloists and chorus plus orchestra (1801). Haydn explained the work’s unusual genesis in a preface to the

Musica Vitale Brings Life to Widely Varied Program of Music by (Mostly) Female Composers at St. Paul's March 23

by Mark Gabrish Conlan • Copyright © 2024 by Mark Gabrish Conlan • All rights reserved I was able to go to the St. Paul’s concert last night on March 23 from 5 to about 6:15 p.m. It was given by a rather free-floating local group called “Musica Vitale” and was billed as “Celebrating Women in the Arts” as part of Women’s History Month in March. The personnel of Musica Vitale as of the March 23 concert were pianist Nonna Alakhverdova, violinist Olena Galytska, soprano Lisa Parente (whom I’d already heard giving a stunning performance as the soprano soloist in Saint-Saëns’ Oratorio de Noël last December), mezzo-soprano Julia Rahm, tenor John Yokoyama (a hauntingly beautiful young man who was listed on the program as “a student at San Diego State University, double-majoring in computer science and vocal performance” – alas, he only appeared as part of a vocal ensemble in the concert’s last two selections), bass-baritone Michael Sokol and “hosts” Penelope Hawkins and William Propp. There